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3 TopicsAutomating the Linux Quality Assurance with LISA on Azure
Introduction Building on the insights from our previous blog regarding how MSFT ensures the quality of Linux images, this article aims to elaborate on the open-source tools that are instrumental in securing exceptional performance, reliability, and overall excellence of virtual machines on Azure. While numerous testing tools are available for validating Linux kernels, guest OS images and user space packages across various cloud platforms, finding a comprehensive testing framework that addresses the entire platform stack remains a significant challenge. A robust framework is essential, one that seamlessly integrates with Azure's environment while providing the coverage for major testing tools, such as LTP and kselftest and covers critical areas like networking, storage and specialized workloads, including Confidential VMs, HPC, and GPU scenarios. This unified testing framework is invaluable for developers, Linux distribution providers, and customers who build custom kernels and images. This is where LISA (Linux Integration Services Automation) comes into play. LISA is an open-source tool specifically designed to automate and enhance the testing and validation processes for Linux kernels and guest OS images on Azure. In this blog, we will provide the history of LISA, its key advantages, the wide range of test cases it supports, and why it is an indispensable resource for the open-source community. Moreover, LISA is available under the MIT License, making it free to use, modify, and contribute. History of LISA LISA was initially developed as an internal tool by Microsoft to streamline the testing process of Linux images and kernel validations on Azure. Recognizing the value it could bring to the broader community, Microsoft open-sourced LISA, inviting developers and organizations worldwide to leverage and enhance its capabilities. This move aligned with Microsoft's growing commitment to open-source collaboration, fostering innovation and shared growth within the industry. LISA serves as a robust solution to validate and certify that Linux images meet the stringent requirements of modern cloud environments. By integrating LISA into the development and deployment pipeline, teams can: Enhance Quality Assurance: Catch and resolve issues early in the development cycle. Reduce Time to Market: Accelerate deployment by automating repetitive testing tasks. Build Trust with Users: Deliver stable and secure applications, bolstering user confidence. Collaborate and Innovate: Leverage community-driven improvements and share insights. Benefits of Using LISA Scalability: Designed to run large-scale test cases, from 1 test case to 10k test cases in one command. Multiple platform orchestration: LISA is created with modular design, to support run the same test cases on various platforms including Microsoft Azure, Windows HyperV, BareMetal, and other cloud-based platforms. Customization: Users can customize test cases, workflow, and other components to fit specific needs, allowing for targeted testing strategies. It’s like building kernels on-the-fly, sending results to custom database, etc. Community Collaboration: Being open source under the MIT License, LISA encourages community contributions, fostering continuous improvement and shared expertise. Extensive Test Coverage: It offers a rich suite of test cases covering various aspects of compatibility of Azure and Linux VMs, from kernel, storage, networking to middleware. How it works Infrastructure LISA is designed to be componentized and maximize compatibility with different distros. Test cases can focus only on test logic. Once test requirements (machines, CPU, memory, etc) are defined, just write the test logic without worrying about environment setup or stopping services on different distributions. Orchestration. LISA uses platform APIs to create, modify and delete VMs. For example, LISA uses Azure API to create VMs, run test cases, and delete VMs. During the test case running, LISA uses Azure API to collect serial log and can hot add/remove data disks. If other platforms implement the same serial log and data disk APIs, the test cases can run on the other platforms seamlessly. Ensure distro compatibility by abstracting over 100 commands in test cases, allowing focus on validation logic rather than distro compatibility. Pre-processing workflow assists in building the kernel on-the-fly, installing the kernel from package repositories, or modifying all test environments. Test matrix helps one run to test all. For example, one run can test different vm sizes on Azure, or different images, even different VM sizes and different images together. Anything is parameterizable, can be tested in a matrix. Customizable notifiers enable the saving of test results and files to any type of storage and database. Agentless and low dependency LISA operates test systems via SSH without requiring additional dependencies, ensuring compatibility with any system that supports SSH. Although some test cases require installing extra dependencies, LISA itself does not. This allows LISA to perform tests on systems with limited resources or even different operating systems. For instance, LISA can run on Linux, FreeBSD, Windows, and ESXi. Getting Started with LISA Ready to dive in? Visit the LISA project at aka.ms/lisa to access the documentation. Install: Follow the installation guide provided in the repository to set up LISA in your testing environment. Run: Follow the instructions to run LISA on local machine, Azure or existing systems. Extend: Follow the documents to extend LISA by test cases, data sources, tools, platform, workflow, etc. Join the Community: Engage with other users and contributors through forums and discussions to share experiences and best practices. Contribute: Modify existing test cases or create new ones to suit your needs. Share your contributions with the community to enhance LISA's capabilities. Conclusion LISA offers open-source collaborative testing solutions designed to operate across diverse environments and scenarios, effectively narrowing the gap between enterprise demands and community-led innovation. By leveraging LISA, customers can ensure their Linux deployments are reliable and optimized for performance. Its comprehensive testing capabilities, combined with the flexibility and support of an active community, make LISA an indispensable tool for anyone involved in Linux quality assurance and testing. Your feedback is invaluable, and we would greatly appreciate your insights.203Views1like0CommentsHow Microsoft Ensures the Quality of Linux VM Images and Platform Experiences on Azure?
In the continuously evolving landscape of cloud computing and AI, the quality and reliability of virtual machines (VMs) plays vital role for businesses running mission-critical workloads. With over 65% of Azure workloads running Linux our commitment to delivering high-quality Linux VM images and platforms remains unwavering. This involves overcoming unique challenges and implementing rigorous validation processes to ensure that every Linux VM image offered on Azure meets the high standards of quality and reliability. Ensuring the quality of Linux images and the overall platform experience on Azure involves addressing the challenges posed by a unique platform stack and the complexity of managing and validating multiple independent release cycles. High-quality Linux VMs are essential for ensuring consistent performance, minimizing downtime and regressions, and enhancing security by addressing vulnerabilities with timely updates. Figure 1: Complexity of Linux VMs in Azure VM Image Updates: Azure's Marketplace offers a diverse array of Linux distributions, each maintained by its respective publishers. These distributions release updates on their own schedules, independent of Azure's infrastructure updates. Package Updates: Within each Linux distribution, numerous packages are maintained and updated separately, adding another layer of complexity to the update and validation process. Extension and Agent Updates: Azure provides over 75+ guest VM extensions to enhance operating system capabilities, security, recovery etc. These extensions are updated independently, requiring careful validation to ensure compatibility and stability. Azure Infrastructure Updates: Azure regularly updates its underlying infrastructure, including components like Azure Boost, to improve reliability, performance, and security. VM SKUs and Sizes: Azure provides thousands of VM sizes with various combinations of CPU, memory, disk, and network configurations to meet diverse customer needs. Managing concurrent updates across all VMs poses significant QA challenges. To address this, Azure uses rigorous testing, gating and validation processes to ensure all components function reliably and meet customer expectations. Azure’s Approach to Overcoming Challenges To address these challenges, we have implemented a comprehensive validation strategy that involves testing at every stage of the image and kernel lifecycle. By adopting a shift-left approach, we execute Linux VM-specific test cases as early as possible. This strategy helps us catch failures close to the source of changes before they are deployed to Azure fleet. Our validation gates integrate with various entry points and provide coverage for a wide variety of scenarios on Azure. Upstream Kernel Validation: As a founding member of Kernel CI, Microsoft validates commits from Linux next and stable trees using Linux VMs in Azure and shares results with the community via Kernel CI DB. This enables us to detect regressions at early stages. Azure-Tuned Kernel Validation: Azure-Tuned Kernels provided by our endorsed distribution partners are thoroughly validated and signed off by Microsoft before it is released to the Azure fleet. Linux Guest Image Validation: The quality team works with endorsed distribution partners for major releases to conduct thorough validation. Each refreshed image, including those from third-party publishers, is validated and certified before being added to the marketplace. Automated pipelines are in place to validate the images once they are available in the Marketplace. Package Validation: Unattended Update: We conduct validation of packages updates with target distro to prevent regression and ensure that only tested snapshots are utilized for updating Linux VM in Azure. Guest Extension Validation: Every Azure-provided extensions undergoes Basic Validation Testing (BVT) across all images and kernel versions to ensure compatibility and functionality amidst any changes. Additionally, comprehensive release testing is conducted for major releases to maintain reliability and compatibility. New VM SKU Validation: Any new VM SKU undergoes validation to confirm it supports Linux before its release to the Azure fleet. This process includes functionality, performance and stress testing across various Linux distributions, and compatibility tests with existing Linux images in the fleet. Azure HostOS & Host Agent Validation: Updates to the Azure Host OS & Agents are thoroughly tested from the Linux guest OS perspective to confirm that changes in the Azure host environment do not result in regressions in compatibility, performance, or stability for Linux VMs. At any stage where regressions or bugs are identified, we block those releases to ensure they never reach customers. All issues are resolved and rigorously retested before images, kernels, or extension updates are made available. Through these robust validation processes, Azure ensures that Linux VMs consistently deliver to customer expectations, delivering a reliable, secure, and high-performance environment for mission-critical workloads. Validation Tools for VM Guest Images and Kernel To ensure the quality and reliability of Linux VM images and kernels on Azure, we leverage open-source kernel testing frameworks like LTP, kselftest, and fstest, along with extensive Azure-specific test cases available in LISA, to comprehensively validate all aspects of the platforms. LISA (Linux Integration Services Automation): Microsoft is committed to open source and that is no different with our testing framework LISA. LISA is an open-source core testing framework designed to meet all Linux validation needs. It includes over 400 tests covering performance, features and security, ensuring comprehensive validation of Linux images on Azure. By automating diverse test scenarios, LISA enables early detection and resolution of issues, enhancing the stability and performance of Linux VMs. Conclusion At Azure, Linux quality is a fundamental aspect of our commitment to delivering reliable VM images and platforms. Through comprehensive testing and strong collaboration with Linux distribution partners, we ensure quality and reliability of VMs while proactively identifying and resolving potential issues. This approach allows us to continually refine our processes and maintain the quality that customers expect from Azure. Quality is a core focus, and we remain dedicated to continuous improvement, delivering world-class Linux environments to businesses and customers. For us, quality is not just a priority—it’s our standard. Your feedback is invaluable, and we would greatly appreciate your insights.518Views0likes0CommentsEnhancing Observability with Inspektor Gadget
Thorough observability is essential to a pain free cloud experience. Azure provides many general-purpose observability tools, but you may want to create custom tooling . Inspektor Gadget is an open-source framework that makes customizable data collection easy. Microsoft recently contributed new features to Inspektor Gadget that further enhance its modular framework, making it even easier to meet your specific systems inspection needs. Of course, we also made it easy for Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) users to use.1KViews0likes0Comments